Climate change a different take on what to do about it.
#3301
Posted 2019-February-27, 12:22
Colder times are drier times (droughts like the perpetual one in Ca. that occurred during the little ice age) and both cause crop failures.
Warmer always coincides with wetter and bumper crops as well as flourishing civilisations although the CO2 does help plants deal with drought.
Now, what was that exact mathematical relationship between [CO2] and global temps or is that only the models that are wrong for some other reason?
#3302
Posted 2019-February-27, 13:48
Al_U_Card, on 2019-February-27, 12:22, said:
more Yada that failed to stick to the wall
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Pro-Trump Billionaires Continue To Bankroll Climate Denial
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Happer has called climate science a cult, claimed Earth is in the midst of a CO2 famine, and said the demonization of carbon dioxide is just like the demonization of the poor Jews under Hitler.
Wow, it's hard to argue with something like that.
#3303
Posted 2019-February-27, 13:57
johnu, on 2019-February-27, 13:48, said:
Wow, it's hard to argue with something like that.
#3304
Posted 2019-February-27, 14:06
Al_U_Card, on 2019-February-27, 13:57, said:
Your point is ? Most of climate change denial in the world is funded by rich vested interests.
Mercer of course is a complete alt-right wing nut "Mercer has said that the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the landmark federal statute arising from the civil rights movement of the 1960s, was a major mistake. In 2017, David Magerman, a former Renaissance employee, alleged in a lawsuit that Mercer had said that African Americans were economically better off before the civil rights movement, that white racists no longer existed in the United States, and that the only racists remaining were black racists." (wikipedia reported from a book on Mercer)
#3305
Posted 2019-February-27, 14:25
Al_U_Card, on 2019-February-27, 13:57, said:
Actually, it is nice that you took time out of your day and climbed out of your anti-reality bunker. Thanks for participating.
Rising seas slash homes values by nearly $16 billion
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How does this happen in a housing market that has been on a strong upswing? Apparently homebuyers are failing to believe climate change deniers who claim that the seacoasts are actually rising, not sinking (Al_U_Card - remind you of anybody )
I suggest home sellers include a link to a climate change denier site in their listings. I'm sure that will convince prospective buyers of low lying property that they are actually getting a house on a hill safely above the waterline.
#3306
Posted 2019-March-05, 11:34
https://wattsupwitht...are-now-public/
#3309
Posted 2019-March-11, 14:24
https://www.gao.gov/...XR9aSzKdSaWNh6g
#3310
Posted 2019-March-12, 01:59
#3311
Posted 2019-March-12, 02:01
Al_U_Card, on 2019-March-11, 14:24, said:
https://www.gao.gov/...XR9aSzKdSaWNh6g
Do you actually have a point you are trying to make?
#3312
Posted 2019-March-21, 17:45
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Should he try to hold back the surging Missouri River but risk destroying a major dam, potentially releasing a 45-foot wall of water? Or should he relieve the pressure by opening the spillway, purposefully adding to the flooding of towns, homes and farmland for hundreds of miles.
Mr. Remus controls an extraordinary machine — the dams built decades ago to tame a river system that drains parts of 10 states and two Canadian provinces. But it was designed for a different era, a time before climate change and the extreme weather it can bring.
“It’s human nature to think we are masters of our environment, the lords of creation,” said Mr. Remus, who works for the United States Army Corps of Engineers. But there are limits, he said. And the storm last week that caused him so much trouble was beyond what his network of dams can control.
“It was not designed to handle this,” he said.
The storm, the “bomb cyclone” that struck the upper Midwest, dumped its rain onto frozen soil, which acted less like dirt and more like concrete. Instead of being absorbed, water from the rain and melted snow raced straight into the Missouri River and its tributaries.
Devastating flooding hit Missouri, Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska. Near Omaha, one-third of Offutt Air Force Base was inundated, including a runway. One Missouri River tributary, the Little Sioux River, rose almost 16 feet in one day.
And early last Thursday, the Niobrara River smashed through the nearly century-old Spencer Dam while pushing huge chunks of ice downriver. By the end of the day, the Niobrara and other tributaries had filled the reservoir behind the Gavins Point Dam, near Yankton, South Dakota, and Mr. Remus faced his decision.
Gavins Point is relatively small, not designed to hold back that kind of inflow. But losing the dam would be catastrophic.
To save Gavins Point, he ordered its spillways opened. At its peak, 100,000 cubic feet of water per second, the same as Niagara Falls, poured into a river already surging toward record heights.
“We filled up our bucket, and the spigot kept running,” Mr. Remus said. The results of last week’s storm are still evident: As of Wednesday, at least three people had been killed and there were emergency declarations in four states.
Few people hold sway over as much water as Mr. Remus, the chief of the Army Corps’ Missouri River Basin Water Management Division. He operates six massive dams that help shape and define a river stretching more than 2,000 miles through the American heartland.
His decisions affect the lives of countless communities and ecosystems — the cities, factories and power plants that draw water from the river; the endangered species that nest on its sandbars; the farmers who cultivate its floodplains.
Often, their interests conflict. “You’re not going to make them happy,” he said, “but you can provide them with an explanation.”
An imposingly large man with a neat mustache, Mr. Remus, 59, grew up in Western Nebraska and speaks deliberately. In his tidy, windowless office in Omaha, the main feature is a tabletop map of roughly half the United States. Over the course of several interviews, he discussed his work and said the Corps had not looked at climate change from a planning perspective.
“Scientists say that, in the Missouri Basin, we’ll be spending more time at each end of the spectrum — longer and more severe floods, longer and more severe droughts,” Mr. Remus said. And this year, he had “nothing but bad options.”
A 2012 report on climate change in the Missouri River Basin, commissioned by the Bureau of Reclamation (the Corps’ western equivalent) predicted by the middle of this century a roughly 6 percent average annual increase in upper-basin runoff and a bit more than a 10 percent increase in the lower river.
The Missouri Basin had more runoff from rain and snow last year than all but two years since record-keeping began in 1898. “Is that normal variation?” he asked, or “are we working our way to a new normal?”
“Something’s changing, what that is exactly. …” he said, trailing off.
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#3313
Posted 2019-March-21, 19:09
#3314
Posted 2019-March-22, 05:35
Al_U_Card, on 2019-March-21, 19:09, said:
In the UK, we're getting places that have had 3 once in 150 years events in the last 10 years, it is clearly getting worse. We're not getting more rain, it's just less spread out. It's also made much worse here by pressure of space which is not as much of a problem in the US causing houses to be built on land that previously absorbed flood water, meaning not only that they get flooded, but run off hits the rivers faster and flood downstream.
#3315
Posted 2019-March-22, 13:13
Cyberyeti, on 2019-March-22, 05:35, said:
Was there not also the issue of the state of your water systems having to meet EU guidelines and not being widened sufficiently to handle increased run-off from increased urban cover? The option of administrative error, incompetence or even malfeasance is also open but often only well-meant.
#3317
Posted 2019-March-22, 14:32
See The Heat Records Broken In Puget Sound This Week
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Climate change deniers claim this was due to daylight savings time But there are new temperature records, and there are new temperature records. Breaking previous records by 10 and 12 degrees F are pretty memorable records.
#3318
Posted 2019-March-22, 14:43
Al_U_Card, on 2019-March-22, 13:13, said:
Clearly those EU guidelines have caused record massive flooding in the USA as well. Damn those EU guidelines Or maybe is the trade imbalance that is causing bad European weather to pile up in the USA. I call on Dennison to impose weather tariffs on the UK and the rest of Europe.
Spring Floods Threaten Most of Continental US
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First it's record droughts, then record flooding. Why doesn't the weather cooperate and validate the climate change deniers? Apparently the weather gods are liberal
#3319
Posted 2019-March-22, 20:20
The precise mathematical relation of our 4% of the 5% of extant GHG and global climate would help to ensure that our tax dollars will be used effectively to control weather and its natural variability.
#3320
Posted 2019-March-23, 04:57
Al_U_Card, on 2019-March-22, 13:13, said:
Well nobody's ever raised that as an issue here, and there are plenty of EU bashers who would if it was true.